nettime_announcer on Sun, 14 Nov 1999 13:35:26 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> announcer 99.46 [a] |
- - - - - - - | 9 9 . 4 6 | - - - - - - - | <nettime> announcer | a << | b - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | c | - - - - Tilman Baumgaertel <tilman_baumgaertel@csi.com> : net arts first | 0 1 | - - - - Dejan Krsic <dejan.krsic@zg.tel.hr> : new bastard books | 0 2 | - - - - SCP <notbored@panix.com> : Surveillance Camera Players | 0 3 | - - - - Marion v. Osten <marionvonosten@gmx.ch> : New MN | 0 4 | - - - - Tapio Makela <tapio@meteori.com> : /~CONNECTED | 0 5 | - - - - Amit Srivastava <amit@corpwatch.org> : WORLD TRADE WATCH RADIO | 0 6 | - - - - Reception <reception@artec.org.uk> : BREATHLESS | 0 7 | - - - - Swiss Institute <swissins@dti.net> : SI/NY panels 1999 | 0 8 | - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | delivered each weekend into your inbox | | mailto:nettime-l@bbs.thing.net | | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 1 | - - - - Hi! I was asked to write something on the history of net art for a book, and it occured to me that I don't really know so much about this subject myself - at least not as far as historic details are concerned, like: which project, which server, which action went online when. I am particularily interested in the years 93, 94, 95, 96, in greyish backgrounds, no gifs etc. But this question is not limited to web projects. If there was use of protocols such as CU See Me, MUDS, MOOS, Email, net-related performances, even FTP or gopher, I would be very curious. The question is, in fact, not even limited to art projects in the strict sense, since some of the first art-related activities on the net were collections of texts, images etc. If there are URL's of these projects, please send them to me personally. If you think that these projects are of general interest and there is something more to say about them that is of public interest, you might want to put your replies on the list. Please let me know your name, where you are from, what your idea was, and an as precise-as-possible date, when it went online. The idea is not to create a hierarchy of who was "there" first. It is more about creating a sense of time, especially since this whole medium is so ephemeral and relies so much on certain technical developments. Please feel free to forward this question to any appropriate context, mailing list, news group, forum, whatever. Thanks. Yours, Tilman .................. I think, and then I sink into the paper like I was ink. Eric B. & Raakim: Paid in full Dr. Tilman Baumgaertel, Hornstr. 3, 10963 Berlin, Germany Tel./Fax. +49(0)30-2170962, email: tilman@thing.de MY HOMEPAGE HAS MOVED!!! http://www.thing.de/tilman - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 2 | - - - - New editions in BASTARD bibliotheque of Arkzin d.o.o, Zagreb, Croatia http://www.arkzin.com GUY DEBORD: SOCETY OF SPECTACLE SLAVOJ ZIZEK: NATO KAO LIJEVA RUKA BOGA? / NATO AS THE LEFT HAND OF GOD? integral and bilingual - english/s.h - edition of essaydealing with questions opened by NATO intervention on Kosov@, illustrated with 16 colour pages & second, revised and extended edition of DUBRAVKA UGRESICs book CULTURE OF LIES All books ca ne obtained at publisher ARKZIN d.o.o. ILICA 176/I tel: 3777 866 fax: 3777 867 e-mail://arkzin@zamir.net - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 3 | - - - - Surveillance Camera Players manifest opposition to surveillance cameras by performing specially adpated plays directly in front of them. situationists and Antonin Artaud website http://www.panix..com/~notbored/the-scp.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 4 | - - - - Dear MN's friends and all others, This text is a summary about MN1/Zurich 98. A new concept for the continuation in 2000 will follow in December 1999. Yours Marion ---------------------------------------- MoneyNations www.moneynations.ch Exhibition, Webzine, Video and Magazine Project, Workshop and Congress with: A-Clip (Berlin), Absolutno (Novi Sad), Mehmet Akiol (Zurich), Edit Andras (Budapest), Joerg Arendt (Bonn), Marion Baruch/Name Diffusion (Paris/Milan), Paula di Bello/ Marco Biraghi (Milan), Jochen Becker (Berlin), Marica Bender /RadioZid (Sarajevo), Luchezar Boyadjiev (Sofia), Iara Boubnova (Sofia), Fritz Burschel / 'No one is illegal', Iana Cvikova /ASPEKT (Bratislava), Eva Danzl Suarez / FIZ (Zurich), Dogfilm (Berlin), Melita Gabric / Blaz Habjan / Martine Anderfuhren (Ljubljana/Geneva), Hex TV (Cologne), Berta Jottar (New York), K3000 (Zurich), Gülsün Karamustafa (Istanbul), Beat Leuthard (Basel), Level ltd. (Zurich), Geert Lovink (Amsterdam), Medienhilfe Ex-Jugoslavien (Zurich), Marton Oblath (Budapest), Ayse Öncü (Istanbul), Marion von Osten (Berlin/Zurich), Drazen Pantic / B92 (Belgrade), Marco Peljhan / Ljudmilla (Ljubljana), Lia & Dan Perjovschi (Bucharest), Pascal Petignat / Peter Riedlinger (Zurich/Vienna), Sascha Roesler (Zurich), Polnischer Sozialrat (Berlin), Kalin Serapionov (Sofia), Oliver Sertic / Attak (Zagreb), Natalie Seitz / Markus Jans (Lucerne), Nedko Solakov (Sofia), Peter Spillmann (Zurich), Deep Europe / V2_East-Syndicate, Mina Vuletic / B92 (Belgrade), Dr. Anna Wessely (Budapest), Jeta Xharra /Mediaproject (Pristina), Zelimir Zilnik / Terra Film (Novi Sad). The MoneyNations project took place for the first time in the Shedhalle in Zurich from 23 October - 13 December 1998. The starting-point of MoneyNations was to address the complex and contradictory process of forming collective and individual identities in (radically) changing political conditions. Central to this analysis was the fact that Western Europe's border policies in relation to Central and South-Eastern Europe is tightening culturally and economically, and the racial discrimination against non-Europeans associated with this. The project concentrated on kindling an active debate between, and bringing together, creative artists and media activists from Eastern and Western Europe and looked at the way in which they are represented in the context of art, as a social and symbolic location. We worked for over a year on setting up a network of correspondents - the "KorrespondentInnennetz - in which theorists, media activists and artists from Central and South-Eastern Europe worked from different points of view against the production of borders by a Europe that is centred above all on the West. The work that emerged from this process of exchange includes video productions, photographic works, installations, theoretical texts and narratives. The artists' and video producers' pieces were introduced in the Shedhalle exhibition and are being shown in various places in Eastern and Western Europe and further exploited as a basis for work and discussion. The Shedhalle project was launched with a three-day congress on the "Economy of the Border" and a workshop with media producers from the former Jugoslavia. The project will continue next year probably in Bratislava and in Vienna. All the contributions are published in English on the www.moneynations.ch web site or in the publication "The Correspondent". Money / Nation Immanuel Wallerstein and Etienne Balibar introduced the concept of 'ambivalent identities' into discussion about racism in the early 90s. They tried to identify elements driven by the global economy in their analysis of discrimination and inequality, and the role these played in maintaining class- and race-specific differences. According to Balibar/Wallenstein, every modern "nation" is a product of colonization/capitalization: it was always a colonizing or colonized power to a certain extent, and to an extent even both at the same time. But the nation-form, and thus the quality that we call national identity, cannot simply be derived from capitalist production methods, as it was for a long time customary to think in classical left-wing analysis, but we can see today that the space that is needed for the circulation of money in particular has a tendency to go beyond national borders. But capital and its protagonists are not independent of spatial requirements; each needs very specific local conditions in order to cream off profit and to be productive. It seems that for the circulation of money today the nationally regulated economies, in the form in which we became familiar with them in Western Europe and the USA after 1945, are no longer appropriate for expansive movements in advanced capitalism in the late twentieth century. Free trade areas, the dismantling of customs agreements (WTO) and the associated hyper-exploitation above all in the south and east, and then the "Global Cities" and their information technologies, together with more flexible working practices, define the spatial conditions of a new, neo-liberal world order. Balibar/Wallerstein say that the world-wide social and economic processes that are now defined as "globalization" correspond with the historical form of a world economy that was always organized and divided into hierarchies in such a way that there is a "center" and a "periphery", where one then finds different forms of accumulation and exploitation. The new approaches of post-colonialism went a stage further as they no longer saw the relationship between the First and Third Worlds as a binary opposition structure. They resisted attempts at holistic social explanations, recognizing that the borderlines between opposing political spheres are much more complex and contradictory than we had assumed. Thus post-colonial criticism takes up the fight with the totalizing concepts of Modernism, here fitting with Gender and Cultural studies in general. Despite its essentially culturalist approach, the post-colonial view does not deny the difference that lies behind the symbolic, political and economic domination of psychological and social identification. In brief, post-colonialism means using different ways of understanding the concepts we use to help us to formulate community, nationality or ethics. On this head as well the post-colonial view chimes with feminist theory and practice. Theorists like Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak work from this point of view and have brought new and fundamental insights into Western feminism. Central to the debate are the different realities of women in the diaspora. The concept of cultural and ethnic units that are prescribed almost naturally (culture clash) was abandoned in favour of a concept of hybridity that places the different social, political and cultural conditions for developing an identity centre-stage. Culture is a starting-point for considering current global changes from a post-colonial point of view, because it clearly shows up the contradictions, conflicts, but also new terrains for action that have already emerged. EUroland Criticism of a eurocentrically organized apparatus for power and knowledge has been increasingly heard since the early 90s, on the German-language art and culture scene as well. But for MoneyNations the central question was whether we can assume a common basis for interpreting the concept of hegemony among the producers of culture in the post-Communist states and those from the "West". Can the countries of Eastern Europe already, still or again be counted as part of the Western centre, or does the Shengen Agreement illustrate precisely the boundaries that have manifested themselves culturally, socially and economically since 1989? Power relationships cannot be explained conclusively in terms of the binary structure of the West as a center and the East as a periphery. It seems that in fact new centers have formed in Central and Eastern Europe and also that racism and sexism are not 'Western' phenomena, but occur all over the world. But in contrast with the North-South argument, the East-West relationship is much more contradictory because of historical and political differences, and also attracts much less attention. The political systems that used to confront each other, whose Cold War propaganda machines quite uninhibitedly permitted representing "the others" as huge and horrific enemies, are now again described as national units, and defined via their particular status in terms of Westernization and advancing capitalism. Media reports still choose the "wild East" as their favourite topic, along with Mafia-type structures, empty state coffers and other states of emergency. United Europe's legislation governing borders and foreigners excludes the "East" as a matter of policy, and multinational concerns and investors discovered Central and South-Eastern Europe as the countries with the cheapest possible labour well before 1990. This is why an attempt is being made on the cultural plane to hark back to the historical continuity of an Eastern and a Western European identity. But typological stereotypes, exoticism and assertions of cultural difference do not occur only in the media, but also in exhibitions of Eastern European art, which face out border production by "Fortress Europe" and Eastern Europe's roll as a global lowest-wage location by constructing authenticity (Sammlung Ludwig) or by asserting a new internationalism (Manifesta). MoneyNations attempted to address these contradictions. Traditionally, European identity was always formed by drawing a line of demarcation with the "major others", Africa, the USA, Japan, Asia and the Orient. This identity relied above all on the special qualities of a cultural tradition, so that the "others' " traditions could be devalued at the same time. Thus extending the eastern boundaries of the EU or joining NATO, which are both being dangled before the countries of Eastern Europe, once more builds on the exclusive quality of "old" Europe and the western center, while the reality of the former socialist alliance and also the countries in the south of the globe are left out of account. Thus culture acquires central significance in the exclusion processes. And yet we should not lose sight of the fact that current European grouping, and European monetary union, are directly linked with global economic competition. But the attempt to fuse the European nation-states into "one Europe" creates new models (for a new pan-European identity) and thus correspondingly excludes anyone who does not fit in with this model of an economically efficient Europe. But this construction involving the "others" is not stable, but constantly subject to different social negotiations. Thus in the case of Eastern Europe the categories have changed constantly since 1989, and differently from country to country. Access The MoneyNations project started with the question of how we can develop cultural practices that intervene actively in these current processes. For this reason the project did not take the angle that harsher immigration policies (in Switzerland as well) derive only from capitalist production methods, but inquired about the significance of racist and sexist categorization and practice for productive forces under late capitalism and what contradictions, instabilities and resistances can already be derived from this. For a year, working from the Shedhalle and supported in part by existing networks (like for example V2/East_Syndicate) and friends who were also producers, we built up a network of correspondents - the "KorrespondentInnennetz". At first, theorists, media activists and artist from Central and Southern Europe started to exchange e-mails, speaking against borders produced by a Europe that was above all centred on the West. The analyses and concepts of the various people involved in the project also made it clear that it was possible to establish forms of communication and resistance, and also new production connections, that rose above individual states, beyond the usual stigmatization as "Bulgarian", "German", "Romanian", "Turkish" etc. Thus the line taken by the project fits in with the general tendency that deregulation of nation-state units, as an effect of liberalized world trade, is also shifting and destabilizing the boundaries of national allegiance and also those of the traditional gender regime. For example, we observed that South-Eastern Europe is leading the world for the European textile industry as a low-wage location because of its geographical proximity: a branch of commerce in which young women in particular work, without security and partly in their own homes; but these women have also become breadwinners for their families, thus making the old privileges of a largely male workforce questionable. Thus theorist Saskia repeatedly points out in her critical analyses that new developments certain to undermine the old notions of statehood and their sexist and racist policies can and will occur in the process of globalization. But a discussion of this kind about civil society or "globalization from below" also involves, for the specifically Eastern European situation, coming to terms with the function that is attached to Western investors and financial capital (Georg Soros) as far as culture promotion and social movements are concerned. And going beyond this, the real practice of harsher immigration requirements and non-recognition of a legal status for migrants within EUrope has to be set against the positive assumptions of global democratization processes. The so-called three-circle-model discriminates against Eastern Europeans in particular, who are forced into informal sectors, as commuting workers or into other conditions of inequality that are usually segregated gender-specifically (as sex workers, cleaners or service personnel). Another important research topic for MoneyNations was the field of consumption: as cultural symbols, ideas and objects are acquired and "domesticized", new local communities also form, and these lead to a new range of available roles, but also to role constraint. For this reason it became a central field of the project to reassess economies that are described as "informal" as opposed to the formal economics of the Western commercial systems. In this context, as part of the ÑBorder Economy" congress, the specific social and economic situation of the post-communist states was made the central consideration. Since 1989, markets have emerged in all the countries of Southern, Central and Central-Eastern Europe in which a new form of retail trade takes place, which are inestimably important for the economies of Eastern Europe and marginalize the West as a center. For example, artist Gülsün Karamustafa of Istanbul reported that since 1989 her city had become the central market-place for the countries of South-Eastern Europe. On the other hand, in Sofia (BUL) a market for bootleg CDs has built up that - although forbidden - still makes up a large part of the functioning economy. These forms of trade subvert Western notions of value in many respects: they question both the protection of trade marks and (border) agreements between nation states. At the same time they represent a real basis for life within the transformation processes in the post-communist countries. These contradictory developments were discussed by the participants, and so was the question of how we can talk about borders and drawing borders without delegating the problems of Germany or Switzerland to Eastern Europeans, or without defining the Western borders as essential. We therefore agreed to follow the "border" from the point of view of subversion, of resistance. The "Suitcase Economy" also became synonymous with our own exchange situations within the project. Marion von Osten Marion von Osten Eisenacherstr.64 D-10823 Berlin fon 0049 30 788 4661 marionvonosten@gmx.ch o. c/o k3000 Schöneggstr. 5 8004 Zürich fon 0041 1 291 3040 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 5 | - - - - Lasipalatsi Media Centre, Helsinki, November 19th-21st, 1999 Friday, Nov 19th European Media Culture MORNING SESSION Location: Book at the Cable Library, Lasipalatsi, 2nd floor 10.30 Welcome & introduction to practice day 11.00 Coffee 11.30 Working Sessions Media Labs - moderated by: David Sinden [ARTEC, London] 13.00 Lunch AFTERNOON SESSION Location: Book at the Cable Library, Lasipalatsi, 2nd floor 15.00 European Media - Are We Content? - Introduction by Tapio Makela 15.15 Welcoming address - Suvi Lindén, Minister of Culture, Ministry of Education, Finland 15.30 European media culture - Marie Ringler [netbase, Vienna] and - Marko Pehljan [Ljudmila, Ljubljana] 16.00 Commentaries & discussion 16.20 Key note: How to Network a Continent? - Sara Diamond [Banff Media Centre, Canada] with - Amanda McDonald Crowley [Australian Network of Art and Technology] 17.45 Coffee & chat @Meteori EVENING SESSIONS 18.15 Evening sessions Networks, moderated by Andreas Broeckmann [V2, Rotterdam] and Rasa Smite [e-lab, Riga] Centres, moderated by: Marie Ringler and Minna Tarkka [Medialab, Uiah, Helsinki] 20.00 Break 21.00 Dinner Saturday, Nov 20th Modelling Best Practices MORNING SESSIONS 10.00 Coffee / Welcome & intro to practice & policy day Networks, Centres, Labs - 15 minute intros by moderators from Friday Responses by: - Jarmo Malkavaara [Arts Council of Finland] - Marianna Kajantie [Lasipalatsi media centre, City of Helsinki Cultural Office] - Will Bell [Arts Council of Enlgand] 11.30 Discussion - Prepared question by each moderator 12.30 Coffee 13.00 New Media Culture and Internet Content in the UK -Will Bell [Arts Council of England] 13.45 Discussion: How to transform cultural policies and audiovisual policies in the context of new media cultures? 14.00 Lunch AFTERNOON SESSIONS 15.15 Local European Media Cultures Forum to discuss how media cultures are produced, distributed and supported nationally and EU-wide - group 1: Modelling best practices for local-national media cultures Simultaneous workshop with EU-representatives, if present - group 2: Modelling best practices for European media cultures (this session will change its shape according to who will be present) 17.00 Coctails (followed by: Open Ended City and/or Media Browsing) 20.00 Sauna - lounge - for those who desire to have a relaxing bath & snacks Sunday, Nov 21st MORNING SESSIONS (preparations for the afternoon) 10.30 Coffee 11.00 Policy Statement drafting - a best practice model: UK /Will Bell [Arts Council of England] and Maria Brewster [FACT, Liverpool] - a best practice model: Netherlands /Cathy Brickwood [Virtual Platform] 11.40 Chairs and moderators of each group reflect on policy-practice development 12.30 Break AFTERNOON SESSIONS Networked Media Cultures in a Changing Europe Open to the public @BIO REX, Lasipalatsi 13.00 Film screening & Comment - Cyber Rex, Belgrade 13.15 Opening words - Marianna Kajantie, Lasipalatsi Media Centre 13.20 Introduction - Tapio Mäkelä and Marleen Stikker 13.40 Three Steps Towards Flourishing European Media Cultures - Panel of policymakers and practitioners, chaired by Andreas Broeckmann 14.40 Virtual Platform: networked Dutch Media Culture - Cathy Brickwood [Virtual Platform co-ordinator] - Medialounge, European Mediaculture CD-ROM 15.00 Policy statements - national - EU - ECB, European Cultural Backbone 16.00 Coffee@ Meteori and departures 17.00 Documentation & postproduction team meet and work in the evening, press releases for local and translocal use ------- Cultural industries and independent media cultural production are of primary importance for Finnish policy development, as a new program, "Content Finland" is being drafted during next year. In each European country, goals of both national and transnational media culture have been met with different strategies. Through Connected knowledge and shared experience, it is possible to form models of best practice - and principles for both national and European policy. The driving force behind this event and series of other meetings prior to it is the ECB, European Cultural Backbone. It is a network of media cultural organisations, centres and active individuals throughout Europe, not only European Union member countries. To quote Dr. Peter Wittmann, Austrian State Secretary for the Arts, "The European Cultural Backbone is the logical extension of this ongoing dialog between cultural practitioners and policy makers regarding strategies of "practice to policy" on both national and European levels." The Main organiser of /Connected, the Lasipalatsi Media Centre, also seeks to discuss how European media centres could increasingly collaborate. How to best connect venues of presenting media culture and sites that produce it? Support of networks, bandwidth, mobility, distribution and production are key factors for policy discussion. Traditionally, in a European democracy, public space has been defined through access to public institutions, freedom to move in city spaces and through the existence of certain democratic instruments such as public libraries and publicly supported broadcast media. New media, Internet in particular, has made it possible to more actively shift content production to smaller units or groups. Creation of public space can mean support for content production and communication that does not focus on a single mass audience, but particular communities (or consumers) and layers within the larger society and the networked world. Major issue for debate is thus to consider, how to best connect various models of best practice and policy that enable cultural production in a networked, changing Europe. The seminar takes place in the very center of Helsinki, in Lasipalatsi Media Centre (www.lasipalatsi.fi). Meals during the conference program are provided for by the organisers and there is no attendance fee. We are providing air fare and accomodation for a group of participants that comes from smaller media centres and organisations. We are happy to assist your travel arrangements by providing information on accomodation and flights. /~CONNECTED brings together practitioners, producers and policy makers within contemporary media culture in Europe. Its attempts to create exchanges of experience and information between organisations and individuals from different fields: media cultural organisations, media centres, policy makers on a local, national and European level, media art organisations, corporate research labs and university researchers. Following events such as P2P conference in Netherlands (http://www.dds.nl/~p2p/) and Networking Centres of Innovation in Austria, it explores the ways in which local experiences can be compared, exchanged and rewritten to form models of best practice. The event will officially launch the ECB, European Cultural Backbone, a network based on trust and a shared interest to promote a rich media cultural practice, which already flourishes in Europe. The network proposes that an Internet Backbone or a set wide bandwidth would be subsidised by the EU in order to enable transnational media production, broadcast transmission of events and inexpensive communications. The ECB acts as an advisory body for the policy makers nationally and within the EU. /~CONNECTED is very much about the goals of the ECB: 1) Bandwidth for media culture 2) Support for models of best practice 3) Active investigation of what European media culture consists of 4) Enhanced networking between media cultural organisations, individual hubs" and policy makers. /~CONNECTED refers to the ways in which media cultural local practices and organisations create collaboration, projects, discourse and policy across and partly independent of national borders. Emerging networks, projects and content are no longer international, but translocal by nature, already connected. HTTP://www.e-c-b.net/ www.lasipalatsi.fi - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 6 | - - - - LIVE FROM SEATTLE: WORLD TRADE WATCH RADIO Get Corporate Watch WTO Coverage Aired on Your Local Radio Station! http://www.corpwatch.org/corner/alert/wtw.html Corporate Watch Editor Julie Light and syndicated columnist Norman Solomon will co-host WORLD TRADE WATCH, a series of five daily radio programs from the historic WTO Summit in Seattle November 29-Dec. 3, 1999 Co-Produced by CORPORATE WATCH: www.corpwatch.org, the NATIONAL RADIO PROJECT: www.radioproject.org, and the INSTITUTE FOR PUBLIC ACCURACY: www.accuracy.org The air you breathe, the food you eat, even the size of your bank account are all affected by the World Trade Organization. Yet transnational corporations increasingly call the shots and benefit from international trade policy. Companies like Microsoft and Boeing plan to roll out the red carpet for top officials from 135 countries at the upcoming summit. Environmentalists, labor and community activists from around the globe will also converge on Seattle to hold forums and protests, demanding that their voices be heard. WORLD TRADE WATCH will talk to farmers from India, trade activists from Ghana, peasants from Chiapas, and grassroots activists from the US and around the world. We'll track behind the scenes corporate lobbyists and buttonhole official trade representatives. We'll have reports from the field and lively in-studio discussion. Find out how you can get your local station to carry WORLD TRADE WATCH! Programs are FREE to non-commercial stations. CONTACT US TODAY: Telephone: (510) 251-1077 Email: wtw@radioproject.org WORLD TRADE WATCH can be aired live from the NPR satellite or via tape delay. One-hour programs can also be aired in 29-minute modules. INTERNET FOR PERSONAL LISTENING: WTO series in RealAudio format on Corporate Watch website: www.corpwatch.org, or the National Radio Project web site, www.radioproject.org SATELLITE: Live uplink from KUOW Seattle A67.7 on the public radio satellite 13:00-13:59 EST INTERNET BROADCAST QUALITY: www.radioproject.org Downloadable version of the programs in MPEG format. See the site for software and instructions. Winamp is necessary for playback. In order to take full advantage of MPEG quality a professional sound card is required. SUPPORT Corporate Watch: We depend on donations from people like you. Make a donation through the web at https://swww.igc.apc.org/trac/donation.html Or send us a tax deductible US bank check or international money order in US dollars make out to TRAC/Tides to PO Box 29344, San Francisco, CA 94129. =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Amit Srivastava International Programs TRAC- Transnational Resource & Action Center PO Box 29344, San Francisco, CA 94129, USA Tel: 1 415-561-6472 Fax: 1 415-561-6493 Email: amit@corpwatch.org Web: http://www.corpwatch.org =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 7 | - - - - BREATHLESS by Szabolcs KissPal an interactive audio and | ARTEC candlelight installation | 243 Junction Road . London N19 & | tube: Tufnell Park (northern line) end of residency | Tuesday 16 November 6:30-8:30pm show and tell | <http://www.artec.org.uk/szabolcs/> Artec will host a special presentation of the installation BREATHLESS and an end-of-residency chance to meet artist Szabolcs KissPal and see documentation of his previous interactive and video works. BREATHLESS focuses on the interaction between sounds and images as entities; air, light and computing as media. The fragility of candlelight generates an audio and video feedback loop which symbolises the impossibility of artistic observation and the imperfection of technical reproduction. His previous works similarly investigate the synchretic relationships between older and new technologies in the creation of the artistic act. KissPal is a media artist and video maker based in Budapest and has been working at the new Artec centre in London since late September. His residency was created through the EMARE 99 (European Media Artist in Residence Echange) programme - an initiative that links media centres across Europe to provide opportunities for new work. BREATHLESS was comissioned by Artec, as part of the EMARE 99 programme. The work was presented at TOOT, the 7th annual ROOT festival, in association with Hull Time Based Arts in October 1999 <http://www.timebase.org> For more info contact Artec on +44 (0)20 7687 6060 or email david@artec.org.uk <http://www.artec.org.uk/szabolcs/> artec . commissions . residencies . network projects . debate . webcasts . channel <http://www.artec.org.uk> . <http://www.channel.org.uk> For more info about Artec & Channel projects contact: David Sinden . t: +44 (0)20 7687 6060 . e: david@artec.org.uk artec . commissions . residencies . network projects . debate . webcasts . channel - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 8 | - - - - November 11, 1999 to January 8, 2000 Empires without States: On notions of success and failure in contemporary art Christoph Büchel, SUBWAY OUTSIDE, Komar and Melamid, Aleksandra Mir, relax, Xposition Curated by Annette Schindler Opening Thursday, November 11, 6-8 p.m. Artists/curator's tour, Saturday November 13, 3 p.m. FAILING SUCCESS PANEL Friday, November 12th, 1999 6-8 p.m. Swiss Institute, 495 Broadway, (212) 925-2035 Subway Outside artists Jeanne van Heeswijk, Martin Lucas, and Hervé Paraponaris will discuss definitions of success when artists seek to broaden the cultural field, questioning their own role and that of the art institutions they work with. What is an 'art work'? How is it perceived? And where is it to be found? Panelists: Barbara Abrash Director of The Center for Media, Culture and History at New York University Barbara Clausen Curator Moderator: Annette Schindler Director, Swiss Institute VIRTUALLY YOURS? Tuesday, December 7th, 1999 6-8 p.m. Swiss Institute, 495 Broadway, telephone: (212) 925-2035 A discussion concerning the changing boundaries of culture in the face of new media. Co-sponsored by the Swiss Institute and The Center for Media, Culture and History at New York University As new communication technologies come to the fore they offer new forms of connection between artist, institution and audience - overturning and or simply avoiding old hierarchies. At the same time, the communications industry commodifies every aspect of life -- using these same new technologies. How can we use the new tools of contemporary artistic production to create an activist urban culture? New Media Where are the Boundaries? Panelists: Paul Chan Internet artist, Professor of Art Cooper Union Drazen Pantic formerly of Radio B-92 Belgrade CONSPIRACY NIGHT Tuesday, December 14th, 8 p.m. Swiss Institute, 495 Broadway, telephone: (212) 925-2035 Aleksandra Mir will also host an evening program titled Conspiracy Night, when her project will be approached and discussed from two different aspects: by critics familiar with the history of performance art as well as conspiracy theorists who claim that the moon landing 30 years ago was as much a staged event as the one that occurred this past summer. __________________________ Swiss Institute is located at 495 Broadway, third floor, telephone: (212) 925-2035. Subway-N, R to Prince Street, 6 to Spring Street. Wheelchair accessible. For further press information, please contact Jackie McAllister, Exhibitions Coordinator, Swiss Institute, at (212) 925-2035. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > > > > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net